the guy that does the tutorial is very good with it just his voice got to me a bit hence the fast forward of the first 3 minutes. have visited that site a bit more and would say it is not the most active but it is still interesting to see what others think and do with their images and methods.

I went back to Old Winchester Hill, with my friend's csc, I took some of my first decent IR shots there, the green field have turned to 'gold' so there is no real possibility of a comparison. I walked a little further on to the fort, where I hadn't been before and there was a decent view to the south west. Took a few shots and came home. Annoyingly I had left home in bright sunlight and came home in sunlight. The weather further inland was cloudy with a few bright patches again so my pictures were all a bit flat..

that is a nice "winter scene" you have going there hedgehopper as Derek said some nice tones running through it. Derek, just beautiful but at some point you are going to have to come back to earth. not jealous, MUCH

I went back to my local churchyard with the GX-1 decided to take loads of pictures of the same scene and change various settings including the white balance which did make a big difference. I found this wheelbarrow next to the graveyard wall. Makes a change from my landscape efforts.

Nice sunny day, I decided to go out locally with my Sigma and just the 24mm prime lens as my focusing with it hasn't been as easy as with the zoom. Walked round to my local playing field again and repeated some shots that I took in early summer. They mostly came out well.

I walked along a short footpath into the end of a cul-de-sac and found this willow tree.. The pictures came out better than expected. It might have been better with a few fluffy clouds, but then, the deep 'blue' sky sets off the leaves well.

Went out to the Willow tree again to try to improve it, too early and the sun was behind the tree causing glare. Just around 30 metres away I was photographing the path running through the park when this chap walked into frame

As a 'vanity' project I have had 30 of my favourite infrared pictures made into a paperback photobook, surprisingly easy and at about 70p per image, not too expensive.A few years ago I used the same service to make a hardback book of my old photos dating back xxx years. I found the only real challenge was selecting a suitable picture to use as the cover, as it has to be a panorama to stretch across the front and back covers